Lorrie Goldstein, Toronto Sun

Lorrie Goldstein is Acting Comment Editor of the Toronto Sun. He joined the Sun in 1978, working as a general assignment reporter, feature writer, Toronto City Hall reporter, Queen's Park reporter, columnist and bureau chief, City Editor and Editorial Page Editor. His main focus is on Toronto, Ontario, Canadian and global politics, with a special interest in the many controversies surrounding the issue of global warming.

If you believe Ontario Premier
Kathleen Wynne’s claim that through
her sound fiscal management she has
balanced the province’s books and can
now spend more on public services, I
have a bridge in Brooklyn I’d like to
sell you.

A new Fraser Institute study by
economists Ross McKitrick and Elmira
Aliakbari directly challenges the
major financial justification
Ontario’s Liberal government gives for
closing down its five coal-powered
electricity plants.

Ever since Stephane Dion’s “Green Shift” election platform in 2008, the federal Liberals have spread the myth that, as Dion put it at the time: “Canada will cut megatonnes of emissions, but we will also make megatonnes of money.”

In a recent Huffington Post column, David Suzuki said while Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been meeting with the United Nations, the premiers and the leaders of the U.S. and Mexico to talk about climate change, he’s done nothing.

Condemnation of the Green Party of Canada in the wake of its decision to support the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) campaign against Israel has given rise to a predictable complaint from Israel’s enemies on both the left and right.

Ontario Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner doesn’t have a seat in the legislature, which is unfortunate because he understands the flaws in Premier Kathleen Wynne’s carbon pricing plan better than most politicians.

What compels politicians like Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.S. President Barack Obama and Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne to deny the reality that Islamist terrorism was a key part of the Orlando massacre?